I'm not sure about The War Game not being shown because it was too scary, I
think that was the excuse, but in reality may have been cos it was bad for
morale and seen as being a recruitment film for CND?  The fear of the bomb
was a real and present danger, we lived near Chobham Ranges and there were
often big explosions and I quite often for a split second thought "that's
it, my flesh is about to be melted from my bones"

Them youngsters don't know how lucky they are.......

Talking of TV, anyone seen Drifters, the female version of the Inbetweeners,
set in Leeds, uses the Amanda Palmer "Leeds United" song as the theme tune
and Elland Road was shown on last nights show.  Like inbetweeners very crude
and funny at times but might be a bit awkward if you watch it with your
teenage daughter.




ttfn

Richard

Triumph Computer Services
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-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Guy Thornton
Sent: 15 November 2013 22:38
To: [email protected]
Subject: [LU] Non-LU : The Cold War

Absolutely non LU this.

Who else has been watching the BBC Cold War series? Me for one and it's with
a mixed feeling and emotions. Younger members of this list may only now
about it from history, and maybe not even then. For some of us it was
reality

Just been watching Cold War, Hot Jets. On the one hand I can remember having
Airfix models of some of those aircraft, followed on from Airfix models of
second world war military aircraft and ships, and there was a certain
beauty, and most certainly awe, of the V-bombers and the Lightning. On the
other hand it was scary. This was the time of MAD (that's Mutually Assured
Destruction for you youngsters, a term coined in the early 50's). I remember
'62 and the Cuban Missile Crisis. I may have been a youngster still at
school but it' remains vivid. Despite turbulence, terrorism and the rest in
the world today this is probably the nearest we came to world annihilation.

My first reaction to try and do something about it was to join the Civil
Defence but it didn't take to long to realize how futile that was. Shades of
Raymond Briggs and there was Peter Jenkin's The War Game. 
Commissioned by the BBC but they though it too scary to show till many years
later. Saw it at the filmhouse top of Vicar Lane in Leeds. And then there
was Dr. Stangelove (or how I learnt to stop worrying and love the war). So
it became CND and Alderston marches.

That was living in interesting times

Guy
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